In the period from 800 to 1050 A.D., the Nordic peoples made their dramatic
entry into the European arena. They stormed forth, terrorizing
well-established societies which were accustomed to war, but not to the
startling tactics of the Vikings.
By Arne Emil Christensen
However, contact between Scandinavia and the rest of Europe was nothing
new. Archaeological findings show that trade and cultural influence can be
traced back several millennia B.C. Nevertheless, the Nordic area was a
distant outpost with little political and economic value for the rest of
Europe.
This picture changed shortly before the year 800. In 793, the
Lindisfarne Monastery on England's east coast was pillaged by foreign
seafarers, and at the same time we find the first recorded reports of raids
elsewhere in Europe. The chronicles and tales of the next 200 years are
studded with alarming accounts of the Vikings. Ships, sailing in large as
well as smaller groups, attacked all the coasts of Europe. The Vikings
sailed up the rivers of France and Spain, conquered most of Ireland and
large sections of England, and took control of areas skirting rivers in
Russia and the Baltic coast. There are narratives of raids in the
Mediterranean, and as far east as the Caspian Sea. Norsemen starting out
from Kiev, were even fool-hardy enough to attempt an attack on
Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire. Eventually, the
plundering raids were replaced by colonization. Place names reveal a large
Viking population in the North of England, centred around York. Farther
south in Britain, a large area was called The Danelaw. The French king
gave Normandy as a fief to a Viking chieftain so that he would keep other
Vikings away. The islands north of Scotland developed a mixed Celtic-Norse
population, and thriving societies were established on Iceland and
Greenland.
The furthest westward drive ended with the unsuccessful attempt at
found-ing a settlement in North America. Around 1000 A.D., people from
Iceland or Greenland discovered land to the west, and the sagas tell of
several journeys including attempts to plant roots in the new land.
Conflicts arose between these colonists and the indige-nous Indians or the
Eskimos, and the newcomers gave up.
Attempts at pinpointing the location of the Norsemen's settlement
have led to such varied results as Labrador and Manhattan, in accordance
with different interpretations of the Icelandic sagas. In the 1960s,
Anne-Stine and Helge Ingstad found the site of early homesteads on the
north coast of Newfoundland. Excavation showed these to be the same sort of
buildings found on Greenland and Iceland. In addition, Nordic artifacts
were exca-vated at the site and dated at circa 1000 A.D. Whether these are
traces of the settlements mentioned in the sagas, or from other journeys
which we have no record of, is impossible to say. However, the finds prove
that Nordic seafarers really sailed to the North American Con-tinent around
the year 1000, as narrated in the Icelandic sagas.
Overpopulation and a scarcity
What are the reasons for this violent expansion within a few generations?
Stable states such as France or the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in England appear
to have fallen easily to the swords of the attackers. As might be expected,
the picture handed down to us in written accounts is tainted by this the
Vikings are portrayed as terrible robbers and bandits. And indeed they
were. But they must have had other traits as well. Some of their leaders
were certainly extremely skilful organizers. An effective military tactic
could win a battle, but the Vikings founded kingdoms in conquered
territories. Some did not survive the Viking period, such as the kingdoms
based in Dublin and York. But Iceland is still a thriving nation. The
Viking kingdom in Kiev formed the basis of the Russian empire, and traces
of the organizational talent of the Viking chieftains are clearly visible
today on the Isle of Man and in Normandy.
The remains of fortresses which could be used as a meeting place for
large armies -- dated to the end of the Viking period -- have been found in
Denmark. The fortresses are circular and divided into quadrants, with
square buildings in each of the four sections. These castles were placed
with a precision testifying to the rulers' advanced sense of order and
system. There must have been a knowledge of surveying techniques and
geometry in the court of the Danish King.
In addition to the West-European narratives, we have written sources
from other Viking contemporaries -- from travelling Arabs and from
Byzantium. Short inscriptions have been left us in the homeland of the
Vikings as well -- the runes carved in wood and stone. The saga tales of
the 12th and 13th centuries also have much to tell us about the Viking age,
even though they are written several generations after the period which
they depict.
The Vikings came from what is now Denmark, Sweden and Norway. Theirs
was a self-sustaining agricultural society, where farming and cattle
breeding were supplemented by hunting, fishing, the extraction of iron and
the quarrying of rock to make whetstones and cooking utensils. Even though
the farmers were generally self-reliant, some goods were traded -- for
instance salt -- a necessity for man and cattle alike. Salt is an everyday
item which would not have been imported from a greater distance than
necessary, whereas luxury items came from further south in Europe. Iron,
whet-stones, and steatite (soapstone) cooking pots were important export
products and were an essential contribution to a trade growth in the Viking
age. Even in periods when Viking raids abounded trade was conducted between
West Europe and the homeland of the Vikings. One of the few reports we have
about condi-tions in Norway in Viking times was orated by the North
Norwegian chief-tain, Ottar. He visited King Alfred of Wessex as a peaceful
trader, at the same time as Alfred was waging war with other Viking
chieftains.
It has been suggested that the expan-sion of the Viking age was
spurred by a population growth outstepping the capacities of domestic
resources. Archaeological evidence shows that new farms were cleared in
sparsely populated forest areas at the time of the foreign expansion -- so
the pressure of population growth is surely a contributing factor. Iron
extraction is another. An abundance of iron to forge weapons and arm
everyone setting off on raids helped give the Vikings the upper hand.
The tactical advantage of the Viking ships
Shipbuilding in Scandinavia also contributed to the tactical superiority of
the Vikings. A well-known Swedish archaeologist has written that the Viking
ships are the only seaworthy amphibious landing vessels ever to be used by
invasion forces. Even though this is an exaggeration, it explains much of
the secret of the Vikings' military superiority. Many of the accounts of
Viking attacks appear to support this theory. The element of surprise was
essential. A swift on-slaught from the sea with light ships, which were
independent of harbours -- and could thus approach a coast where they were
least expected -- and beating a quick retreat before a counter-offensive
could be launched; this was the tactic.
Spheres of interest developed between Danish, Swedish, and Norwe-gian
Vikings -- even though groups from all three nations often partici-pated
together when the most renowned chieftains set sail. The Swedes sailed
mainly to the east, and they controlled the eastern trade routes via the
waterways leading into Russia. Large amounts of Arabian silver coins in
Swedish archaeological diggings testify to intensive trading. The Danes
sailed to the south, to Friesland, France and Southern England, while the
Norwegians headedto the west and northwest, to Northern England, Scotland,
Ireland, the Orkneys, Shetlands, and Faroes.
The ships were not only necessary for raids and trade, but also a
pre-requisite for successful colonization, when entire families with all
their possessions and livestock sailed away to new lands. The perilous
voyages across the North Atlantic to the Orkneys, Shetlands, Faroes,
Iceland and Greenland testify that the ship-builders of the Viking age not
only could build ships which were swift-sailing and capable of attacks in
the North Sea area, but extremely sea-worthy vessels as well. Colonization
followed when seafarers discovered new land, or men returned from trading
or raids and spread news of bountiful conditions abroad.
In certain areas, the Vikings appear to have displaced the original
inhab-itants. In others, such as Northern England, it seems that the
Norsemen's main enterprise was cattle breeding and they utilized land of
little use to the indigenous grain-cultivating farmers.
Those who journeyed to Iceland and Greenland found virgin soil. With
the possible exception of a few Irish monks on Iceland -- who soon "left
because they did not want to have heathens as neighbours" -- Iceland and
the parts of Greenland colonized by the Vikings appear to have been
uninhabited when the Norsemen arrived.
The contemporary references we have about the Vikings stem
predominantly from sources in Western Europe who had bitter experiences
with the invaders, and we are undeniably presented with the worst side of
the Vikings. Archaeologi-cal excavations both in the homelands of the
Vikings and in their new settle-ments give more nuance to this picture. We
have finds from homesteads, farms, and market places where lost or
discarded articles tell of a common everyday life. Traces have been found
testifying to iron extraction in moun-tain areas, where iron ore in bogs
combined with ample firewood from forests to form the basis of a
flourish-ing industry. Quarries where soapstone was gathered for pots and
exception-ally fine whetstones have also been found and analyzed. In some
fortunate circumstances we have found ancient agricultural fields in areas
later left to nature. In such places we can find the piles of stones once
painstakingly cleared away from fields, and with enough care, we even
uncover the furrows left by Viking ploughs.
Towns and kingdoms
As the Viking period progressed, society changed. Leading chieftain
families accumulated land and power, forming the basis for kingdoms, and
the first towns were founded. From Staraya Ladoga and Kiev in Russia, to
York and Dublin in the British Isles, we can piece together the daily life
of the townspeople. Market places and towns were based on craftsmanship and
trade. Even though the town-dwelling Vikings probably kept cattle, farmed
and fished to meet their house-hold needs, the towns certainly depended on
agriculture supplies from outlying districts. In South Norway was the
marketplace Kaupang, near Larvik, mentioned in Ottar's narrative to King
Alfred. Kaupang never became more than a marketplace, while Birka near
Malaren in Sweden and Hedeby at the German-Danish border could be called
towns. Both were abandoned at the end of the Viking period, but Ribe in
Denmark's Vest Jylland thrives today as of course do York and Dublin. In
these towns we find well regulated areas with clearly defined plots of
land, roads and surrounding fortifi-cations. Some of the towns have
obviously been planned. Many are well established in accordance with the
orders of the kings who personally -- or by means of trusted aids -- had
their say in town planning and the distribution of plots. We can see that
renovation and garbage disposal was given less attention than town planning
-- waste can be found in thick layers. In contemporary times, the stench
must have been most uncomfortable. Today we find clues to everyday
conditions, from the rubbish of various craftsmen to fleas and lice -- and
we can piece together the way life was. We find objects which must have
come from afar, such as Arab silver coins and Byzantine silk, heaped
together with the products of local blacksmiths, cobblers and comb-makers.
The Norse gods
At the end of the Viking age, Chris-tianity was generally accepted in the
Nordic countries. It replaced a heathen religion, with a pantheon of gods
and goddesses who each had power over their own domains. Odin, old and
wise, was the chieftain of them all. Thor was the god ofthe warriors, while
the goddess Froy was responsible for the fertility of the soil and
livestock. Loki was a trickster and a sorcerer, unreli-able and distrusted
by the other gods. The gods had dangerous adversaries -- the jotuns --
representing the darker side of life.
The heathen gods are best known from descriptions written down in
early Christian times, and perhaps coloured by the new faith. Farm names
such as Torshov, Frøyshov and Onsaker have kept their original
heathen god names. Present day Norwegian place names with the last syllable
"hov" indicate that there once was a heathen temple at the site.
The gods had human traits, and like their Greek counterparts on
Olympus they lived a raucous life. The gods fight, eat and drink. Mortals
who fell in battle, went straight to the table to feast with the gods, and
burial tech-niques clearly tell us of a need for the same paraphernalia in
the life after death as here on earth. In the Viking age, the dead could be
buried or cremated, but burial gifts were necessary in either case. The
amount of equipment the dead took with them reflects their status in life
as well as different burial traditions. In Norway, the burial traditions
were especially rich. As a result, graves are a prolific source of
knowledge about the everyday life of the Vikings. Every-thing provided for
use in the afterlife provides us with a window into the world of the
Vikings -- even though time has taken its toll and often only remnants are
left of the buried objects.
The grave remnants supplement our material from excavated living
sites. In these sites -- both in towns and on farms -- we find misplaced or
damaged articles, remains of houses, waste from food making and
crafts-manship, and in the graves we uncover some of the finest personal
effects of the deceased.
A violent society
An indication of the violent nature of society is the fact that nearly all
the graves of males include weapons. A well-equipped warrior had to have a
sword, a wooden shield with an iron boss at its centre to protect the hand,
a spear, an axe, and a bow with up to 24 arrows. The helmets and coats of
mail with which most Vikings are commonly portrayed in modern pictures, are
extremely rare in archaeological material. Helmets with horns, ubiquitous
in present-day depictions, have never been found amongst relics from the
Viking period. Even in the graves with the most impressive array of
weapons, we find signs of more peaceful activities: sickles, scythes, and
hoes lie along side of weapons. The blacksmith was buried with his hammer,
anvil, tongs, and file. The coastal farmer has kept his fishing equipment
and is often buried in a boat. In women's graves we often find personal
jewelry, kitchen articles and artifacts used in textile production. Women
too, are often buried in boats. Wooden articles, leather goods, and
textiles generally do not survive the soil, so there are many gaps in our
knowledge.
In a smattering of graves, the soil-type has been more conducive to
pre-servation. In many areas along the Oslofjord, we find blue clay
directly underneath the turf, dense and nearly impermeable by water and
air. A few graves are well preserved after a thousand years, and we have
retained a whole spectrum of articles placed in the pit. The treasures from
the enormous Viking ship graves from Oseberg, Tune, and Gokstad -- which
can be seen at the Viking Ship Museum at Bygdøy in Oslo -- are prime
examples of what gifts can be preserved for future generations, given the
right soil conditions. We do not know who the dead were, but they obviously
belonged to the upper echelon of their society. Perhaps they belonged to a
royal family which, a few generations later, unified Norway as one nation.
The graves at Oseberg, Gokstad and Tune have recently been dated by
analysis of the annual rings in the oak material. The Oseberg ship was
built around 815-820 A.D. The burial has been dated to an exact year - it
was in 834. The Gokstad and Tune ships were constructed in the 890s and
were placed in the graves right after 900 A.D. In these three graves, big
ships were used as grave repositories.
Only the hull of the Tune ship has been preserved, and the grave was
robbed earlier of nearly all its items, but enough remained for us to see
that the ship was originally of the same fine quality as the two others.
The Tune ship was about 20 metres in length. The Oseberg ship's length is
about 22 metres and the Gokstad ship is 24 metres long.
At the time of burial, the ship was drawn up on land and placed in a
pit. A burial chamber was constructed behind the mast, where the deceased
was placed to rest in a bed, dressed in finery. Copious provisions were
placed in the ship, dogs and horses were sacrificed, and a large burial
mound was piled on top of the vessel.
An Arab travelling in Russia at the end of the 9th Century happened
upon a group of Vikings who were in the process of burying a chieftain in
this manner. Ibn Fadlan made note of his observations, and his journal has
survived. The deceased chieftain's ship was pulled ashore, and valuables
were placed aboard. The corpse was dressed in fine clothing and placed on
board in a bed. A slave woman, who had chosen to follow her master in death
was sacrificed along with a horse and a hunting dog. The ship with its
contents was burned, and a burial mound was constructed over the ashes. We
have finds of cremated ships graves in the Nordic countries and in Western
European Viking sites, but the large graves along the Oslofjord were not
put to the torch. In the Gokstad ship a man was found, and the Tune ship
probably carried a man a well. How-ever, two women were buried with the
Oseberg ship. The skeletons are of a 50-60 year-old and a 20-30 year-old.
We can only speculate as to which was the companion and which was the
noblewoman.
Both the Oseberg and Gokstad graves were plundered by grave robbers,
so the jewelry and luxurious weapons, which surely have been there, were
not excavated. But articles of wood, leather and textiles -- of no interest
to the thieves -- have survived. There are remnants of similar graves in
other locations and it appears to have been standard practice to include
sacrificed dogs and horses, fine weapons, some nautical equip-ment such as
oars and a gangplank, balers, cooking pots for shipmates, a tent and often
fine imported bronze vessels. Without a doubt, these once contained food
and drink for the deceased.
The Oseberg grave contained no trace of weapons, reasonably enough
for a female grave, but all the other standard equipment followed. In
addition, the central figure had been given articles which testify to her
dignity as an administrator and a wife on a wealthy farm. We have to assume
that women have had the main responsibility for carrying out farm work when
the men were off on Viking journeys. The woman from Oseberg was, like many
contemporary women, an authoritative and highly respected lady, whether she
sat with other women at a spinning wheel or loom, or watched over work in
the fields, or supervised milking and the making of cheese and butter. In
addition to the ship, she has brought along a wagon and three sleighs. Both
on land and water, she was prepared to go in style. Enough horses were
sacrificed to draw the wagon as well as the sleighs.
A tent and cooking utensils, tools for textile production, chests and
small boxes for valuables, a breadboard, milk pails and ladles, a cutting
knife and frying pan, shovels and rakes, a saddle, a dog collar and much
more was found in the grave. Her provisions included two slain oxen. A
dough of rye flour was placed to leaven on the large wooden breadboard, and
in a finely decorated bucket, apples were included for dessert.
Many of the wooden articles were ornamentally carved. It appears as
if a number of artists were at work on the farm. Even such utilitarian
things as the sleigh poles are ornately carved. Aside from the Oseberg
find, our main knowledge of Viking art comes from metal jewelry, where the
format is modest. The choice of motif is the same for woodcarving. The
artists have been preoccupied with animal figures. These are imaginary
animals, twisted and braided together in a tight asymmetric arabesque.
These carvings are superb examples of advanced craftsmanship, so the
Oseberg wood carvers must have been as handy with chisels and sheath knives
as with swords and battle axes.
The man buried in the Gokstad ship has also had the service of a
gifted woodcarver, even though the find is not so rich in ornamentation as
the Oseberg grave. The Oseberg ship has a low freeboard and is less
seaworthy than the ships from Tune and Gokstad, but it certainly could have
managed a North Sea voyage and could be typical of the ships which were
used for the first Viking attacks around the year 800. A copy which has
been built proved to be quick to the wind, but was not easy to manage. The
Oseberg, Gokstad and Tune ships were probably the private vessels of rich
persons, rather than longships for transporting warriors. The Gokstad ship
is very seaworthy. This has been demonstrated by replicas which have
crossed the Atlantic in modern times. The hull design makes the ship fast
-- either under sail or when 32 men pulled on the oars. Even with a full
crew, the Gokstad ship drew no more than one metre of water, so it could
easily have been used for assaults on foreign shores. It is possible that
the Vikings' experiences through frequent sea voyages in the early 9th
Century led to a rapid evolution in hull design. If this is a correct
assumption, then the differences between the Oseberg ship and the Gokstad
ship might be a result of three generations of experience in the North Sea
and hours of discussion between shipbuilders seeking improvements.
1000 years of development
The Viking ships were clinch-built. The ships used for travelling to
distant shores were a result of a thousand years of experience in the
Nordic area. Shipbuilders strove to construct light-weight and flexible
vessels, pliant to the forces of sea and wind -- working with the elements
instead of against them. The hull of the Viking ships is built on a solid
keel, which together with a finely curved bow, forms the backbone of the
vessel. Strafe after strafe was fitted to keel and stem and these were
bolted to each other with iron rivets. This hull shell provided strength
and flexibility. After the shipbuilder had given the shell its desired
shape, ribs made from naturally-curved trees were fitted and these gave
additional strength. To increase flexibility, strafes and ribs were bound
together. Cross supports at the water-line supplied lateral support, and
extra solid logs braced the mast.
The ships sailed were square-rigged on a midship mast. In a calm, or
against a strong headwind, the crew could man the oars.
As the Viking period progressed, different types of ships were
developed. There were ships intended for battle which were built for speed
and a large crew. There were also ships built for commercial trade, where
speed was less important. These had a greater girth to permit more cargo.
Trade ships did not have a large crew, and they were better suited for
sailing than for rowing.
Christianity takes over
The Viking raids tapered off around the year 1000. The Vikings had become
Christians, and the conversion had a restrictive effect on their urge to
plunder. Denmark, Sweden and Norway had become separate king-doms generally
united under single monarchs. Life was not always peaceful, even in
Christian kingdoms, but wars were steered by the shifting alliances of the
kings. Countries could enter wars, but the age of private battles was gone
as was that of coloni-zation. The trade relations established in the Viking
period continued, and the Nordic countries emerged as a part of a Christian
Europe.
The author of this article, Arne Emil Christensen is Professor, Dr. Phil.
at the University Museum of National Antiquities in Oslo. He specializes on
shipbuilding history and craftsmanship in the Iron Age and the Viking
period.
Produced for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs by Nytt fra Norge. The author is responsible for the contents of the article.
Printed in March 1996
Reproduced with permission from the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
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